While we can't say if it represents a general sentiment at Samsung or not, the company's UK director of consumer electronics, Andy Griffiths, sure went out on a bit of a limb in a recent interview with Pocket-lint, with him saying that
Blu-ray has, to paraphrase David Bowie, only "five years left," and that he "certainly wouldn't give it ten." He did say, however, that he thought 2008 would be Blu-ray's year, adding that "it's going to be huge", and that Samsung is "heavily back-ordered at the moment."
As for Samsung's future after Blu-ray's supposed demise, Griffiths seems to think that
OLED will be the next big thing, and he's pegging 2010 as a possible date for it to become mainstream and replace LCD. He didn't offer a prediction as to when it will die out though.
[Thanks, Big W]
Tags: andy griffiths, AndyGriffiths, blu-ray, breaking news, BreakingNews, prediction, samsung
Comments
22
Subscribe to commentsDanSep 5th 2008 8:48AM
Downloads will never take off. Consumers still demand something physical to keep.
Just ask COMCAST internet users how they feel about HS internet download total usuage being limited and then charged for overage or cancelled service because they download too much data.
In additon to that, there are still many, many rural areas that do not have high speed capabilities. The TV sat companies internet is not close to being capable of transmitting HS HD movies to watch.
TocoSep 5th 2008 10:45AM
About 10 years ago I read about ICI (Brit chemical & paint co) technology that had increased CD type capacity 1000 times. And if they used different color lasers on the same drive, that would make the capacity increase 1000 times per color laser. The technology involved having the laser shine through the disk or tape and the reading head be on the other side. A cursory search of the interent di not find a reference to it. Maynbe someone else knows about it or remembers reading about it.